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WQCR (1500 AM, "La Jefa") is a radio station licensed to serve Alabaster, Alabama, United States.The station is owned by Rivera Communications, LLC. WQCR broadcasts a Spanish adult hits music format to the Birmingham, Alabama, area.
WCSZ (1070 kHz, "La Jefa 94.9 FM & 1070 AM") is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Sans Souci, South Carolina, United States, and serving the Greenville–Spartanburg media market in Upstate South Carolina. WCSZ is owned by Tama Broadcasting and airs a Spanish contemporary hit radio format.
XHMQ-FM is a radio station on 98.7 FM in Querétaro, Querétaro. The station is owned by Respuesta Radiofónica and carries a grupera format known as La Jefa. The station is owned by Respuesta Radiofónica and carries a grupera format known as La Jefa.
First Nations community radio: CBQE-FM: 105.1 FM: Fort Good Hope: CBC Radio One: public news/talk: CIAM-FM-30: 95.1 FM: Fort Liard: CARE Radio Broadcasting Association: Christian radio: VF2022: 101.9 FM: Fort Liard: Native Communications Society of the Northwest Territories: First Nations community radio: CHFL-FM: 107.1 FM: Fort Liard: Fort ...
Ici Radio-Canada Première: public news/talk CJVA-FM: 94.1 FM: Caraquet: Radio de la Baie: adult contemporary CBAL-FM-2: 95.3 FM: Caraquet: Ici Musique: public music CKRO-FM: 97.1 FM: Caraquet: Radio Péninsule: community radio CIMS-FM-1: 96.7 FM: Dalhousie: La Coopérative Radio Restigouche: community radio CBZD-FM: 96.5 FM: Doaktown: CBC ...
Live radio is sound transmitted by radio waves, as the sound happens. Modern live radio is probably [original research?] most used to broadcast sports but it is also used to transmit local news and traffic updates. Most radio that people listen to today is pre-recorded music, and the days of solely live broadcast music are generally not as present.
In June 2008, WKBF was sold to La Jefa Latino Broadcasting, [12] for a purchase price of $680,000. [13] La Jefa continued the Regional Mexican format, under the "La Jefa" brand as opposed to the "La Pantera" brand. By January 2010, WKBF was the 2nd-most-listened-to AM station in the entire Quad Cities market with a 1.9 share. [14] [12]
On September 11, 2013, La Jefa moved to sister station KLQB (104.3) and KLJA shifted to a younger-skewing version of the regional Mexican format as "El Sancho 107.7", "El Sancho"—translating colloquially to "the other one"—has a double meaning: an "alternative" (as in: to KLQB's programming) or "the other man" (as in: a "mister"). [4]